Jun 18, 1997

Latino football players from UT Austin’s history are listed in book that began with a trivia question

Latino football players from The University of Texas at Austin whose athletic accomplishments inspired journalists to make them a part of sports page history are listed in a recently published book that evolved from a trivia question.

AUSTIN, Texas Latino football players from The University of Texas at Austin whose athletic accomplishments inspired journalists to make them a part of sports page history are listed in a recently published book that evolved from a trivia question.

“When I first asked my close friends how many Latinos had played professional football over the years, the responses were few. We came up with a list of only 10 players, most of them current at the time we pondered this question,” said author Mario Longoria in his preface to Athletes Remembered: Mexicano Latino Professional Football Players 1929-1970.

Longoria said the UT Austin players are an important part of the history of Latinos in football and those listed in the book include players up through the 1980s. They are:

  • Francis Dominques of Kerrville played fullback and was a UT letterman in 1920-21. Dominguez scored the only touchdown that beat Texas A&M by a 7-3 score in 1920 and enabled Texas to win its first Southwest Conference title.

  • Richard Ochoa of Laredo played halfback and was listed as All Southwest Conference in 1952 and Most Valuable Player of the 1953 Cotton Bowl. He was drafted by the New York Giants in 1953, but decided to instead go on to medical school.

  • Rene Ramirez of Hebbronville was a halfback chosen as All Southwest Conference in 1959. He was one of the first selections of the Buffalo Bills in the American Football League expansion draft in 1960, but did not pursue a football career.

  • Raul Allegre of Coahuila, Mexico, a specialty kicker, was a UT Austin letterman in 1981-82. He kicked for three National Football League teams, culminating with the New York Giants Super Bowl XXI championship.

  • Robert Guevara, a defensive tackle from Marfa, was a 1971 UT letterman who participated in the 1972 Cotton Bowl.

  • Rene Amaya, an offensive back from San Diego, Texas, was a 1973 UT letterman and a participant in the 1974 Cotton Bowl.

  • Kiki DeAyala of Cuba and later Houston, was a linebacker and an All Southwest Conference player in 1981-82. DeAyala was drafted and played in the NFL with the Cincinnati Bengals and in the United States Football League with the Houston Gamblers.The book gives newspaper sports page accounts of key plays from football games that still come up in conversation at gatherings of college alumni and sports trivia enthusiasts. An example is this one from the San Antonio Express, dated Nov. 26, 1920:

“Outplayed during half of a hotly contested game and carrying the short end of a 3-0 score, the Texas Longhorns came back in the final period here today and defeated their ancient rivals, the Aggies, 7-3 in one of the greatest games ever staged on Clark Field, when Francisco Dominguez, a Kerrville lad, plunged the final four yards to the Aggie goal line.”

Longoria, who received his masters degree from the University of Texas at San Antonio, is a training specialist for an insurance company in San Antonio. He said the lack of answers to his question about Latino professional football players started his quest for a few answers, and then more and more answers, which he eventually compiled into a book. He said he hopes the book will help bring to light the accomplishments of Latino athletes.

During his spare time over a period of 14 years, Longoria’s research included digging through old newspaper clips and interviewing a multitude of journalists, coaches, players and even families of early players for lively accounts of the players and their contributions to football.

Longoria said his book ends with significant professional football events in 1970 because that year marked the end of the old era in the National Football League and the beginning of a new one, when it was consolidated with the American Football League.

Athletes Remembered is published by Bilingual Review/Press at Arizona State University in Temple, Ariz. For additional information, contact Longoria at (210) 680-2062.

 

1920   longhorns football (2).jpg

Francis Dominques of Kerrville played fullback and was a UT letterman in 1920-21. Dominguez scored the only touchdown that beat Texas A&M by a 7-3 score in 1920 and enabled Texas to win its first Southwest Conference title.

“Outplayed during half of a hotly contested game and carrying the short end of a 3-0 score, the Texas Longhorns came back in the final period here today and defeated their ancient rivals, the Aggies, 7-3 in one of the greatest games ever staged on Clark Field, when Francisco Dominguez, a Kerrville lad, plunged the final four yards to the Aggie goal line.”

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Richard Ochoa of Laredo played halfback and was listed as All Southwest Conference in 1952 and Most Valuable Player of the 1953 Cotton Bowl. He was drafted by the New York Giants in 1953, but decided to instead go on to medical school.

Richard Ochoa of Laredo played halfback and was listed as All Southwest Conference in 1952 and Most Valuable Player of the 1953 Cotton Bowl. He was drafted by the New York Giants in 1953, but decided to instead go on to medical school.

     

1958 Rene Ramirez.jpg

Rene Ramirez of Hebbronville was a halfback chosen as All Southwest Conference in 1959. He was one of the first selections of the Buffalo Bills in the American Football League expansion draft in 1960, but did not pursue a football career.

     

Raul Allegre of Coahuila, Mexico, a specialty kicker, was a UT Austin letterman in 1981-82. He kicked for three National Football League teams, culminating with the New York Giants Super Bowl XXI championship.

Raul Allegre of Coahuila, Mexico, a specialty kicker, was a UT Austin letterman in 1981-82. He kicked for three National Football League teams, culminating with the New York Giants Super Bowl XXI championship.

       

      

Rene Amaya, an offensive back from San Diego, Texas, was a 1973 UT letterman and a participant in the 1974 Cotton Bowl.

Rene Amaya, an offensive back from San Diego, Texas, was a 1973 UT letterman and a participant in the 1974 Cotton Bowl.

     

1982 Kiki+Deayala.jpg

Kiki DeAyala of Cuba and later Houston, was a linebacker and an All Southwest Conference player in 1981-82. DeAyala was drafted and played in the NFL with the Cincinnati Bengals and in the United States Football League with the Houston Gamblers.The book gives newspaper sports page accounts of key plays from football games that still come up in conversation at gatherings of college alumni and sports trivia enthusiasts. An example is this one from the San Antonio Express, dated Nov. 26, 1920:

Added as of 6/23/2023— Mike Garcia

Mike Garcia, a founding member of TXHSFB, wasn’t raised on football, but that didn’t stop him from winning a national championship with the University of Texas as an offensive lineman in 2005.

“Personally, I didn't grow up knowing really what football was,” said Garcia, who was raised on the east side of Houston. “As a Hispanic kid, I grew up watching basketball, and I grew up watching soccer and playing soccer.”

Garcia was hesitant to play football as a freshman in high school but eventually grew to enjoy playing football TLSN had the privilege of meeting Mike Garcia in 2016, 11 years after his playing days.

He was at the 2016 touchdown club dinner. Above -Selvin Young, Mike Garcia, Daisy Garcia, and Vince Young May 2016.



2003weight lifting- Mike Garcia

Billy Graham once said, “a coach will impact more people in one year than the average person will in an entire lifetime.”

Some credit should be given to Mack Brown for coaching a young boy into a man, but most of the credit goes to Mike’s work ethic, his wife’s influence, and his love for his children.

Recently, Mike Garcia continued his journey of influencing the souls of young boys by accepting the job as Defensive Coordinator for the Dawson Eagles.

Horns 🤘 for Mike Garcia